Looting Numerous reports of the wreck site being infiltrated by looters and souvenir hunters were made following the disaster. Items stolen from the wreck include the
ship's bell, cash registers, jewellery, furniture, artwork and various assorted smaller items. Sources at Costa Crociere indicated that the thieves may have gained access to the interior of the ship via entrances cut by search and rescue teams.
Securing wreck site and protecting environment of the type relocated away from the
Costa Concordia wreck for fear of the threat posed by subsequent engineering work Isola del Giglio lies within the
Pelagos Sanctuary for Mediterranean Marine Mammals,
Salvage On 12 February 2012, was predicted to take from 7 to 10 months, depending on weather and sea conditions. Once in port, the ship would be dismantled and the materials sold as scrap. The salvage plan included the following operations: • Secure the hull to the land using steel cables, to stop it falling deeper • Build a horizontal underwater platform below the ship • Attach
sponsons, to the
port side of the hull • Bring the hull to vertical, by winching (or
parbuckling) the hull onto the platform • Attach sponsons to the
starboard side of the hull • Refloat the hull and tanks • Recovery tow to an Italian port
Parbuckling :: Preparatory work consisted of building an underwater metal platform and artificial seabed made of sand and cement on the downhill side of the wreck and welding
sponsons to the side of the ship above the surface. The operation to right the ship and free it from the rocks began on 16 September 2013 but was delayed by bad weather. Once the ship had been rotated slightly past a critical angle of 24° from its resting position, valves on the sponsons were opened to allow seawater to flood into them and the increasing weight of the water in the sponsons completed the rolling of the ship to the upright position at an accelerated pace, without further need of the strand jacks and cables. The ship was returned to a fully upright position in the early hours of 17 September 2013, shortly before 3:00 a.m. CET. the salvage operation had cost over €600 million ($800 million). The final cost of the salvage came to be $1.2 billion.
Images of righting of Costa Concordia File:Costa_Concordia_parbuckling_07.jpg|The operation progresses slowly, at less than 2 degrees per hour. On the right are the port side sponsons. File:Costa_Concordia_parbuckling_09.jpg|Sponsons ready to fill with sea water, nearing 24 degrees of rotation File:Costa_Concordia_parbuckling_11.jpg|The morning after the parbuckling File:Costa_Concordia_parbuckling_18.jpg|After parbuckling and before refloat, September 2013 File: Costa_Concordia_parbuckling_spectral_view_17.jpg|Starboard side of the righted
Costa Concordia, showing crush damage from the rock spurs upon which she had rested
Refloating and removal Following the conclusion of the righting operation, the ship was kept on the platform while further inspections were made and the starboard sponsons attached. On 10 October 2013 a $30 million option was taken with
Dockwise for the use of the world's largest semi-submersible heavy lift vessel, , to transport
Costa Concordia as an alternative to conventional towing, but ultimately
Costa Concordia was indeed refloated and towed to Genoa in July 2014. In December 2013, invitations were issued by Costa to 12 companies to tender for the dismantling of
Costa Concordia, in France, Italy, Norway, Turkey and the UK. On 30 June 2014 the Italian Government endorsed Costa's decision to have the vessel dismantled at
Genoa by Italian companies Saipem, Mariotti and San Giorgio. On 1 February 2014 a Spanish diver working on the
Costa Concordia wreck died after cutting his leg on a sheet of metal. He was brought to the surface alive by a fellow diver, but later died. This was the only death to occur during the
Costa Concordia salvage operation. On 14 July 2014 salvage operators re-floated
Costa Concordia off her submerged platform and towed the ship laterally a short distance from the coast. On 23 July 2014,
Costa Concordia began her final journey to the
Port of Genoa.
Scrapping On 27 July 2014,
Costa Concordia arrived in Genoa where it was moored against a wharf that had been specially prepared to receive the vessel for dismantling. On 11 May 2015,
Costa Concordia was towed to the Superbacino dock in Genoa to remove the upper decks and superstructure. The last of the sponsons were removed in August 2016 and the hull was taken into Genoa drydock No. 4 on 1 September for final dismantling. Final scrapping of the ship was completed on 7 July 2017, with 53,000 tons of material having been recycled. File:Refloating crop.jpg|Wreck refloated, 20 July 2014 File:La-Costa-Concordia-entra-nel-Porto-di-Pra-27-luglio-2014 (cropped).jpg|Wreck departing Giglio for
Genoa, 23 July 2014 File:2014 07 27 Arrivo Concordia (14) (cropped).jpg|Wreck arriving at Genoa, 27 July 2014 File:Costa Concordia in fase di ormeggio al terminal VTE (cropped).jpg|Wreck docked near Genoa,
Pegli (
Porto di Prà), 27 July 2014 File:Genova Riparazioni Navali e Costa Concordia - panoramio (Costa Concordia).jpg|Wreck after being lightened and relocated to the Superbacino dock in Genoa, 28 August 2015 File:Costa Concordia Abwracken.jpg|The wreck, with its superstructure being dismantled, in the Superbacino dock in Genoa, 12 September 2015 File:Costa Concordia scrapping 2017-01-10-17-05-37 (39495820581).jpg|The wreck in its final stage of demolition in drydock No. 4 Genoa, 10 January 2017 File:Genoa (Italy)-Génova (Italia) - 50550421238 (Dry Dock) (Costa Concordia).jpg|The wreck near the end of its final stage of demolition, with keel visible, in drydock No. 4 Genoa, 10 June 2017
Site remediation After the wreck of
Costa Concordia was towed away, Costa Crociere put Micoperi in charge of the salvage site remediation. This project is also known as phase WP9. Initially, $85 million was assigned to the project, which was to start at the end of 2014, and take about 15 months for its completion. The main activities included ocean floor cleaning, anchor block removal, grout bag removal, and platform removal. The project continued into May 2018. The entities involved regularly published details of the activity.
Ship remnants and artifacts The entirety of
Costa Concordia was recycled during her scrapping. The first phase of this effort, which began on 16 October 2014, centered upon the removal of all the furniture and interior structures within the ship, as well as waste found in the secured parts of the ship. ==Loss and compensation==